Viacom International Inc. v. Winshall

72 A.3d 78, 2013 WL 3678786, 2013 Del. LEXIS 359
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 16, 2013
DocketNo. 513, 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 72 A.3d 78 (Viacom International Inc. v. Winshall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Viacom International Inc. v. Winshall, 72 A.3d 78, 2013 WL 3678786, 2013 Del. LEXIS 359 (Del. 2013).

Opinion

BERGER, Justice:

In this appeal we consider whether an arbitration determination should be vacated because the arbitrator refused to consider certain evidence and because the arbitrator lacked authority to decide whether a particular issue was arbitrable. In several similar cases, the Court of Chancery has resolved the arbitrability question inconsistently. In this case, the trial court held that neither claim provided a basis to vacate the arbitration determination. We agree and affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

This dispute arises out of a 2006 Agreement and Plan of Merger (Merger Agreement) under which Viacom International, Inc. agreed to cash out the stockholders of Harmonix Music Systems, Inc. Viacom paid $175 million at closing, and agreed to make additional “Earn-Out” payments based on Harmonix’s financial performance in 2007 and 2008. Walter A. Winshall, the designated stockholder representative, disputed the 2008 Earn-Out Statement calculated by Viacom. As provided in the Merger Agreement, Winshall set forth each of his disagreements in a 2008 Summary of Issues.

The parties were unable to resolve all of their disagreements, so they submitted the Earn-Out Disagreements (the unresolved items from the 2008 Summary of Issues) to BDO USA LLP, the selected Resolution Accountants (“BDO”). The December 8, 2010 BDO Engagement Letter specified the manner in which Viacom was to produce additional documents; the dates on which initial and reply submissions were due; the manner in which BDO could submit and receive answers to substantive questions prior to the hearing; and the manner in which the hearing would be conducted.

In their initial pre-hearing submissions, the parties focused on the propriety of Viacom’s deductions for the costs of unsold inventory. Viacom argued in its reply submission that, if it could not properly deduct the costs of Harmonix’s unsold inventory, it could account for that inventory by taking an inventory write-down deduction. Winshall argued that, because the inventory write-down was not included in the 2008 Earn-Out Statement, it could not [80]*80be considered. BDO noted that the inventory write-down, and other issues that were included in the parties’ submissions, did not appear to be included in the Earn-Out Disagreements. As a result, BDO asked the parties whether they agreed to have BDO consider those matters in reaching its determination. They did not.

BDO issued its decision in December 2011. It agreed with Winshall that the costs of unsold inventory should not be deducted from net revenue. BDO did not consider the inventory write-down because the parties did not agree to add that issue as an Earn-Out Disagreement, and because Viacom had not identified the inventory write-down in its 2008 Earn-Out Statement. BDO also refused to consider all other issues that were not presented, as required by the Merger Agreement, in the initial documents (Viacom’s 2008 Earn-Out Statement, Winshall’s 2008 Summary of Issues, and the resulting Earn-Out Disagreements). BDO determined that the 2008 Earn-Out was $298 million.

Viacom filed this action two weeks after BDO’s decision. The complaint alleges that BDO’s determination disregarded the terms of the Merger Agreement, and failed to consider Viacom’s arguments. In addition, it alleges that Winshall breached the Merger Agreement by refusing to consent to BDO’s consideration of Viacom’s arguments and evidence. The complaint seeks a declaration vacating BDO’s determination on the ground that it constitutes manifest error. The complaint also seeks other, related relief. Both parties moved for summary judgment. The Court of Chancery granted Winshall’s motion, denied Viacom’s motion, and confirmed BDO’s determination that the 2008 Earn-Out due is $298,813,095. This appeal followed.

Discussion

The parties agree that Viacom’s challenge to the BDO determination is governed by the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”).2 Under the FAA, an arbitration may be vacated only in very limited circumstances. Section 10 provides that:

a) In any of the following cases the ... court ... may make an order vacating the award upon the application of any party to the arbitration—
(1) where the award was procured by corruption, fraud, or undue means;
(2) where there was evident partiality or corruption in the arbitrators, or either of them;
(3) where the arbitrators were guilty of misconduct in refusing to postpone the hearing, upon sufficient cause shown, or in refusing to hear evidence pertinent and material to the controversy; or of any other misbehavior by which the rights of any party have been prejudiced; or
(4) where the arbitrators exceeded their powers, or so imperfectly executed them that a mutual, final, and definite award upon the subject matter submitted was not made.3

Viacom argues that the decision should be vacated under § 10(a)(3) because BDO’s refusal to hear pertinent and material evidence rendered the arbitration fundamentally unfair. Specifically, the “misconduct” was BDO’s refusal to hear or [81]*81consider Viacom’s evidence that the 2008 Earn-Out should include an inventory write-down to reflect the diminished value of unsold goods. Viacom stresses the fact that BDO asked for permission to address this issue, but that Winshall refused. As a result, BDO expressly limited its analysis to, “those Earn-Out Disagreements for which the Parties have agreed that both the issue and the amount are properly before the Resolution Accountants.”4 BDO’s refusal to consider the inventory write-down, according to Viacom, was not a decision as to the scope of the arbitration. It was simply an unfair exclusion of very significant evidence that would have had a $200 million impact on the calculation. If BDO’s exclusion of the inventory write-down evidence is deemed to have been a decision on arbitrability, Viacom contends, the court, not BDO, should have made that decision.

The claim that BDO’s exclusion of evidence was “misconduct” under the FAA lacks merit. “Every failure of an arbitrator to receive relevant evidence does not constitute misconduct requiring vacatur of an arbitrator’s award.”5 Courts have found misconduct, for example, where arbitrators refused to await the testimony of a key witness who was temporarily unavailable because his wife had a recurrence of cancer.6 In another case, the arbitrator misled one party into believing that evidence substantiating its claim had been admitted as a business record, and then refused to consider that evidence because it was hearsay.7 By contrast, no misconduct was found where arbitrators ignored claims that one party manipulated the availability of a witness, thereby limiting its ability to present its case. “Because the panel interpreted the contract ... on a basis that rendered [the witness’s] testimony irrelevant, it did not fundamentally err in declining further action on that issue.”8

BDO did not ignore any relevant evidence. Rather, it decided that evidence concerning an inventory write-down could not be considered, absent consent of the parties, because that issue was not identified in the original documents governing the scope of the arbitration. There was no misconduct, even if BDO’s decision on that issue was incorrect.9

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 A.3d 78, 2013 WL 3678786, 2013 Del. LEXIS 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/viacom-international-inc-v-winshall-del-2013.